
Muslim Thai Bibliography
2.3. Conflict post-2004
Abuza, Z. (2006). A Breakdown of Southern Thailand’s Insurgent Groups. Terrorism Monitor, 4(17), 4–6.
Abuza, Z. (2006). The Islamist Insurgency in Thailand. Current Trends in Islamist Ideology, 4. 🔗 Link
Abuza, Z. (2006). The Effects of Thailand’s Coup on the Southern Insurgency. Terrorism Monitor, 4(20), 7–9.
Abuza, Z. (2007). Three Years after the January 2004 Raids, the Insurgency in Southern Thailand is Building Momentum. Counter Terrorism Blog. 🔗 Link
Abuza, Z. (2007). The Role of Foreign Trainers in Southern Thailand’s Insurgency. Terrorism Monitor, 5(1). 🔗 Link
Abuza, Z. (2009). Conspiracy of Silence: The Insurgency in Southern Thailand and its Implications for Southeast Asian Security. Washington DC: United States Institute of Peace Press.
Advisory Council for the Promotion of Peace in the Southern Border Provinces, Islamic Council in the Southern Border Provinces, & Pondok School Association of the Southern Border Provinces. (2007). อิสลามกับความจริงที่ต้องรู้ [The Truth that Should be Known]. Yala: Yala Provincial Authority.
Advisory Council for the Promotion of Peace in the Southern Border Provinces, Islamic Council in the Southern Border Provinces, & Pondok School Association of the Southern Border Provinces. (2007). อิสลามความจริงที่ต้องเปิดเผย [Islam: The Truth that Should be Revealed]. Yala: Yala Provincial Authority.
Affan Tubyasak. (2020). The Role and Challenges of Human Rights Groups in Mitigating Injustice in The Deep South of Thailand. (MA). University Malaya, Kuala Lumpur.
Afnan Due-Reh, & Arie Kusuma Paksi. (2021). The Tragedy of Conflict Irresolution: Peace Dialogue in Southernmost Thailand. Paper presented at International Conference on Sustainable Innovation Track Humanities Education and Social Sciences (ICSIHESS 2021).
Ahmad Amir bin Abdullah. (2020). Southern Thailand: Some Grievances of the Patani Malays. Journal of International Studies (Sintok, Kedah, Malaysia), 4, 102–111.
Ahmad-Norma Permata. (2007). Muslim Insurgencies in Southeast Asia: Intractability, Security Dilemma, and the “Islamic Factor”. Global & Strategis, 1(2), 62–82.
Ajirapa Pienkhuntod. (2017). Facilitation, Imposition, or Impairment?: The Role of Bridging Networks on Peacebuilding of Local Religious Leaders in the Deep South of Thailand. (PhD). University of Otago.
Albritton, R. B. (2005, April 3–6). Interpreting the Conflict in Southern Thailand. Paper presented at Ninth International Conference on Thai Studies, Northern Illinois University.
Albritton, R. B. (2005). Thailand in 2004: The “Crisis in the South”. Asian Survey, 45(1), 166–173.
Albritton, R. B. (2010). The Muslim South in the Context of the Thai Nation. Journal of East Asian Studies, 10, 61–90.
Aminoh Jehwae, & Che Man Siti Hajar. (2016). The Problems of Socio-Cultural Community in Patani and Penang: A Comparative Study. SHS Web of Conferences, 23, 01001.
Amnesty International. (2009). Thailand: Torture in Southern Counter-Insurgency. London: Amnesty International.
Amnesty International. (2011). They Took Nothing but His Life – Unlawful Killings in Thailand’s Southern Insurgency. London: Amnesty International.
Amporn Marddent. (2005, April 3–6). Women in Conflict Situations. Paper presented at Ninth International Conference on Thai Studies, Northern Illinois University.
Amporn Marddent. (2017). Women Political Participation in Peacebuilding in Southern Thailand. Al-Albab, 6(2), 229–246.
Amporn Marddent. (2019). Religious Discourse and Gender Security in Southern Thailand. Austrian Journal of South-East Asian Studies, 12(2), 225–247.
Andersson, M., & Engvall, A. (2012). The Dynamics of Conflict in Southern Thailand: An Analysis of Spatial and Socio-Economic Factors. Paper presented at The 33rd Arne Ryde Symposium–Asia Economic Panel.
André, V. (Ed.). (2009). Southern Thailand: A Cosmic War? Melbourne: Global Terrorism Research Center.
André, V. (2010). Globalization: A New Driving Force in Southern Thailand. In D. Wright-Neville & A. Halafoff (Eds.), Terrorism and Social Exclusion: Misplaced Risk – Common Security (pp. 114–135). Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing.
André, V. (2012). ‘Neojihadism’ and YouTube Patani Militant: Propaganda Dissemination and Radicalization. Asian Security, 8(1), 27–53.
André, V. (2012). Framing Separatist Terrorism in Southern Thailand: Collision, Collusion, and Convergence. Monash University, Melbourne.
André, V. (2013). From Colonialist to Infidel: Framing the Enemy in Southern Thailand’s ‘Cosmic War’. In J. A. Camilleri & S. Schottmann (Eds.), Culture, Religion and Conflict in Muslim Southeast Asia (pp. 109–125). New York: Routledge.
André, V. (2014). The Janus Face of New Media Propaganda: The Case of Patani Neojihadist YouTube Warfare and Its Islamophobic Effect on Cyber-Actors. Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations, 25(3), 335–356.
André, V. (2015). Violent Jihad and Beheadings in the Land of Al Fatoni Darussalam. Religions, 6(4), 1203–1216.
André, V. (2016). Thai Cyber-Actors: Evidence of an Islamophobic Effect. In Fear of Muslims? (pp. 111–130). Springer.
André, V., & Lentini, P. (Eds.). (2010). Mapping Violence in Southern Thailand. Caulfield: Global Terrorism Research Centre, Monash University.
Anonymous. (2013). Berjihad di Pattani (The Fight for the Liberation of Pattani). In R. Gunaratna & A. Acharya (Eds.), The Terrorist Threat from Thailand: Jihad Or Quest for Justice? (pp. 118–145). Dulles: Potomac Books.
Anonymous. (nd). Berjihad di Patani [Waging Jihad in Patani].
Anson, R. (2005). Photo Essay: Thailand’s Underground War. SAIS Review, 25(2), 141–156.
Anwar Koma. (2023). Explaining States-Muslim Minority Relations in Southeast Asia: Different Paths toward Peace and Violence. (PhD). Dokuz Eylul University.
Anwar Koma, & Ekkarin Tuansiri. (2022). Who Are the Patani Peace Influencers? Exploring from Perspectives of Civil Society in Southern Thailand. Asia Social Issues, 15(1), 250031–250031.
Aree Jampaklay, Ford, K., & Aphichat Chamratrithirong. (2017). How Does Unrest Affect Migration? Evidence from the Three Southernmost Provinces of Thailand. Demographic Research, 37, 25–52.
Arpapat Indradat. (2015). Peace Journalism and Thailand’s Southern Insurgency: A Comparative Analysis of the Conflict Coverage in Bangkok Post and The Nation. (PhD). Bournemouth University.
Asia Foundation. (2017). Thailand. In The State of Conflict and Violence in Asia (pp. 168–179). Bangkok: Asia Foundation.
Askew, M. (2007). Thailand’s Recalcitrant Southern Borderland: Insurgency, Conspiracies and the Disorderly State. Asian Security, 3(2), 99–120.
Askew, M. (2007). Conspiracy, Politics and a Disorderly Border: The Struggle to Comprehend Insurgency in Thailand’s Deep South. Washington DC: East-West Center.
Askew, M. (2007). Landscapes of Fear, Horizons of Trust: Dealing with Danger in Thailand’s Insurgent South. Paper presented at the 59th Annual Meeting of the Association for Asian Studies, Boston.
Askew, M. (2008). Thailand’s Intractable Southern War: Reflections on Policy, Insurgency and Discourse. Contemporary Southeast Asia, 30(2), 186–214.
Askew, M. (2009, July 19). A Tale of Two Insurgents. Bangkok Post. 🔗 Link
Askew, M. (2009). Fear and Trust in South Thai Villages and Insurgency. Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 40(1), 59–86.
Askew, M. (2009, Dec 11–12). States of Fantasy: Patani’s Dissonant Pasts and the Impossibility of Reconciliation. Paper presented at The Phantasm in Southern Thailand: Historical Writings on Patani and the Islamic World, Chulalongkorn University.
Askew, M. (2010). The Spectre of the South: Regional Instability as National Crisis. In M. Askew (Ed.), Legitimacy Crisis in Thailand (pp. 235–272). Chiang Mai: Silkworm Books.
Askew, M. (2010). Legitimacy Crisis in Thailand. Nonthaburi; Chiang Mai: King Prajadhipok’s Institute; Silkworm Books.
Askew, M. (2010). Insurgency and the Market for Violence in Southern Thailand: ‘Neither War nor Peace’. Asian Survey, 50(6), 1107–1134.
Askew, M. (2011). Insurgency Redux: Writings on Thailand’s Ongoing Southern War. Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 41(1), 161–168.
Askew, M. (2014). Reaping the Whirlwind: Thailand’s Coup and the Southern Problem. In Pavin Chachavalpongpun (Ed.), “Good Coup” Gone Bad: Thailand’s Political Development since Thaksin’s Downfall (pp. 219–252). Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies.
Askew, M. (2016). Thailand’s Strange Southern War: Insurgency, Disorder and the Fragile State. In A. L. Freedman (Ed.), The Internationalization of Internal Conflicts: Threatening the State. Abingdon: Routledge.
Askew, M., & Helbardt, S. (2012). Becoming Patani Warriors: Individuals and the Insurgent Collective in South Thailand. Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, 35, 779–809.
Bajoria, J., & Zissis, C. (2008). The Muslim Insurgency in Southern Thailand. 🔗 Link
Ball, D., & Farrelly, N. (2012). Interpreting 10 Years of Violence in Thailand’s Deep South. Security Challenges, 8(2), 1–18.
Barnes, B. E., & Abdul Syukur, F. (2009). Mediating Contemporary, Severe Multicultural and Religious Conflicts in Indonesia, the Philippines and Thailand. Routledge.
Barron, P. (2015). What Role Does Transitional Justice Have to Play in Thailand’s Deep South? Deep South Watch. 🔗 Link
Barter, S. (2016). Civilian Strategy in Civil War: Insights from Indonesia, Thailand, and the Philippines. Palgrave Macmillan US.
Barter, S. J. (2011). Strong State, Smothered Society: Explaining Terrorist Violence in Thailand’s Deep South. Terrorism and Political Violence, 23(2), 213–232.
Bayu Mitra Adhyatma Kusuma. (2016). Patani United Liberation Organization: From Jihad to Local Politics Movement. The Indonesian Journal of Public Administration, 2(1), 33–44.
Bayu Mitra Adhyatma Kusuma. (2017). Islam, Asymmetric Policy, and Social Conflict: The State’s Role as a Root of Radicalism in the Philippines and Thailand. IKAT: Indonesian Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 1(1), 33–46.
Biel, E., Hicks, N., & McClintock, M. (2005). Losing Ground: Human Rights Defenders and Counterterrorism in Thailand. Human Rights First. 🔗 Link
Bjarnegård, E., Engvall, A., Srisompob Jitpiromsri, & Melander, E. (2022). Armed Violence and Patriarchal Values: A Survey of Young Men in Thailand and Their Military Experiences. American Political Science Review, 1–15.
Bonnar, M.-A. (2009). The Role of Grassroots Women Peacebuilders in Southern Thailand. (MA Thesis). Royal Roads University.
Bonura, C. J. (2007). Indeterminate Geographies of Political Violence in Southern Thailand. Presentation at Thammasat University. 🔗 Link
Braam, E. H. (2013). Malay Muslims and the Thai-Buddhist State: Confrontation, Accommodation and Disengagement. In Hui Yew-Foong (Ed.), Encountering Islam: The Politics of Religious Identities in Southeast Asia, pp. 271–312. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies.
Brannon III, B. M. (2012). Southern Thai Insurgency and the Prospect for International Terrorist Group Involvement. (MA Thesis). Naval Postgraduate School.
Brinkley, J. (2013). Islamic Terror: Decentralized, Franchised, Global. World Affairs, 176(2), 43–55.
Brooks, M. C., & Brooks, J. S. (2013). What Can School Leaders Do About Violence in Schools? Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 10(2), 115–118.
Brooks, M. C., & Ekkarin Sungtong. (2014). Leading in Conflict Zones: Principal Perceptions of Armed Military Guards in Southern Thai Schools. Planning and Changing, 45(3/4), 356.
Brooks, M. C., & Ekkarin Sungtong. (2015). The Challenge of Multicultural Education During Insurgency: The Case of Southernmost Thailand.



